There was no need to hint at your rel@tionship status, IMO. All in all, though, you could have done worse.

He was the one who opened with a comment about what our rel@tionship status was. And in a way that was irritating-bordering-on-offensive to us. Imagine if you had been out with a friend of the same sex and a complete stranger said, "It's so nice to see a g*a*y couple enjoying their day."

--------------eta to add my partner's comment: "If someone's going to air an assumption about you, you can at least make sure it's a correct assumption."

« Last Edit: April 05, 2009, 11:53:05 PM by PackRat »

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It is the policy of the United States Navy to neither confirm nor deny the presence of nuclear weapons aboard its vessels.

He was the one who opened with a comment about what our rel@tionship status was. And in a way that was irritating-bordering-on-offensive to us. Imagine if you had been out with a friend of the same sex and a complete stranger said, "It's so nice to see a g*a*y couple enjoying their day."

The touching him was the one etiquette concern I had. It was completely spontaneous, and rather out of character for me. it just felt right. He was an older gentleman, and said things in a very friendly, warm way, so I guess I wanted to convey that we were, literally, reaching out to him, not being confrontative. (We both spoke softly in our responses.)

« Last Edit: April 05, 2009, 11:59:12 PM by PackRat »

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It is the policy of the United States Navy to neither confirm nor deny the presence of nuclear weapons aboard its vessels.

A simple "No, no men at home " may have corrected his assumption just as well while not make anything of his assumption. He then could have made whatever further assumptions he wished in the privacy of his own head. I worry that your reply may have embarressed him, although the lesson to not assume the world is hetero is a good one.

I think I'd have been hard pressed not to reply "Well yes... it's always 'Ladies Day' at our house." Paired with a puzzled look that could have done the trick

I don't think there was any reason to engage as far as he did. He was just a random person that you wouldn't see again. I'd have simply said "yes" or laughed and walked away. Continuing to engage and touching a stranger had the possibility of not going well for any of you. Not every assumption needs complete correction and analysis.

Imagine if you had been out with a friend of the same sex and a complete stranger said, "It's so nice to see a g*a*y couple enjoying their day."

Happened darn-near daily. We were even invited to Couple's Night by our new neighbors when we moved into an apartment together at 19. We never cared, nor did we take the time to stop and explain to strangers that we were just best friends, yada yada. Simply wasn't worth our time and energy.

My partner and I were at a museum this afternoon, and as we entered one gallery, a member of the museum security staff said "I guess you ladies left the men at home today!"

We kind of goggled for a minute and said "What?"

"Looks like you're having a ladies' day out!"

I gently touched his shoulder and said "Think about it for a minute." He then said "What?" and my partner said "There's another option."

Took him a second, but then the penny dropped and he just sort of went "Oh" and went away looking sheepish.

How'd we do?

I think that you went a bit too far. Correcting people who are trying to make "small talk" as part of their function as someone employed with dealing with the public is not really polite. "No, not really," and moving on would have been much more appropriate.

BTW, there are *at least* TWO other options, not just one, that might have applied.

And touching him was quite rude. If *he* started doing the same thing to the patrons, many people would be VERY upset, and complain to his management.

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My cousin's memoir of love and loneliness while raising a child with multiple disabilities will be out on Amazon soon! Know the Night, by Maria Mutch, has been called "full of hope, light, and companionship for surviving the small hours of the night."

Lyssiej

While I agree that the touching is iffy, I don't think you did anything at all rude. My ex-girlfriend and I looked vaguely similar (same build, skin color, similar hair) and often people commented on how nice it was to see two sisters enjoying dinner/etc. together. Each time, I smiled and said, "Actually, this is my girlfriend." I'd have done the same had they mistaken a boyfriend for my brother.